Who Loves You?
I was listening to an interview with Anne Lamott, who is a writer and person that I very much admire. She was talking about the concept of self-care, and how her entire life these days is based on self-care, which felt quite resonant to me. Recently someone asked me what I do with all my time, now that I’m neither teaching yoga nor raising children, and I was quite puzzled. I fill it? It seems like my days are all full and busy and very little of my time feels wasted. But I think the better answer is one like Lamott’s, in that my whole life feels like one giant self-care project at this stage in my journey towards the grave.
Lamott spoke of everything she does as a radical act of love towards herself, stating that if she so much as makes herself a cup of peppermint tea or eats a cookie she thinks Someone is taking care of me and loving me, that “someone” being her own self. I’m going to start thinking this way. Someone loves me so much that they made me this hummus, I’ll think at lunch, eating my own homemade hummus. Someone is taking care of me by making me sit on the deck and read for an hour, I’ll think. After all, one cannot be a writer without being a reader, and so it’s career development as well as self-care.
Is It A Robot?
I have a real aversion to AI and Chat GPT and other things that are destructive to our environment and also to our collective intelligence. I realize – YES I REALIZE – that there are benefits to the medical community and research, sure. But also? It is making us collectively stupider. I am sure you can, for example, develop a travel itinerary using AI, but you know what else you can do? Google. It’s already supremely easy to access information about literally everything in the world, I do not think we need to make our brains lazier, particularly given the environmental damage AI wreaks. Do not even get me started on AI-created pictures or writing.
This aversion did not, however, stop me from listening to a podcast about Chat GPT romances. Did you know this was a thing? I certainly did not. There are a lot of lonely people out there who are embarking on romantic, and even sexual, relations with a chat bot. And if you, like me, were thinking how do you have sex with a chat bot, then you are not thinking outside the box enough. It would be similar to phone sex, let’s put it like that.
So this is a thing now. I listened to an interview with a man who, apparently, has a REAL LIFE GIRLFRIEND but also a chat bot one, and the reason for the latter is that – wait for it – his girlfriend doesn’t understand him. To quote Miss Cornelia, ISN’T THAT JUST LIKE A MAN? This “relationship” started when his actual human girlfriend was uninterested in watching the lunar eclipse with him, and so he now goes to his chat bot girlfriend for all his astronomy conversation-based needs.
If you’re thinking woof, that is fucked up, then you are in the exact same mental space as I was, until I started giving it a bit more thought. It’s not much different from chat rooms of two decades ago, or even those 1-800 numbers to talk to “singles in your area,” but the difference is that there is not a human on the other end of it. Which brings me to my question: which is worse, finding out your spouse is cheating on you with a robot, or finding out your spouse is cheating on you with a random stranger in a chat room? Or paying for phone sex? Or – and I actually think this is the worst of all – having an online affair with someone on social media?
Bounty and Bust
A vastly better use for our planet’s water is for food production, I think we all can agree. Which brings me to a long-overdue garden update!

This was my harvest last weekend, before I started shutting the garden down. It’s a little early for it, but we are going on vacation soon and I’d rather get things done in the beautiful September sunshine than later, when it might not be so lovely. The tomatoes and raspberries are, improbably enough, still going strong. I have enough squash and zucchini (omg, so much zucchini), to last me all year, and I have more onions and jalapenos than I can possibly use, so I have been sharing them with the winery staff.
Not everything has been so bountiful, though. I have six gorgeous bell pepper plants that have, through the summer, been absolutely covered with beautiful, perfect peppers. Despite this, I have harvested only seven peppers in total, because every time one starts to ripen and change colour, I go to inspect it only to find that it has been nibbled on. Worse, sometimes the peppers look amazing and then disintegrate when I pick them up, because water has gotten in through the nibbles and rotted the pepper from the inside out.
The only possible explanation is that it is a squirrel, and indeed, I have seen those little bastards zipping around the garden boxes. We have a tall deer fence, and there isn’t anything else that could be getting in. Squirrels! They have been my gardening nemesis since my Calgary days, when those assholes would merrily dig up all my plants for no good reason or chew all the wires on our outdoor Christmas decorations. One year, squirrels ate the entire hat off of a light-up wire snowman, and another year they dug up and ate all 150 fall bulbs that I had painstakingly planted. As we all know, the Eastern Grey Squirrel is not even native to Calgary, and I will tell you that once Barkley caught one and tried to kill it and I did not feel bad about it. Me! Animal loving me! I was like FUCK THAT SQUIRREL, GO BARKLEY.

Anyway, next year I shall sprinkle cayenne in my pepper beds to keep the (actually native) squirrels out. If that doesn’t work, I give up. I will just buy from the farm market.
The other bust was my fall planting of spinach and kale. I enthusiastically planted seeds in mid-August, like I did last year, and then we had warmer than normal temperatures. The heat stunted the germination process and now, a month later, I have only the smallest scatterings of seedlings. I suppose I could try again now, but as I said we are leaving for vacation soon and it feels like it will be a wasted effort.
Weekly Reading
Not a wasted effort? This week’s reading. One of these things is not like the others!

I Who Have Never Known Men. Rex’s face says it all. I read a dystopian novel and I liked it. I think it was because it is an entirely character-based novel that takes place entirely in the narrator’s head, the narrator who is not only unnamed to us, but unnamed at all. She is known as “the child,” as she was taken as a child to the underground bunker with thirty-nine women. One day a siren goes off and the guards disappear immediately. The women escape to discover they are all alone in the world, whatever world they are in. This book asks such interesting questions: what happens to a person brought up in isolation from the rest of the world, how does a person make sense of the world, what is the nature of hope and when is hope lost?

Bad Summer People. Do you love juicy, gossipy, scandalous stories about rich people behaving badly? Me too! This was so much fun to read; we start with the discovery of a dead body and then the story backtracks from there. There are multiple (read: SO MANY) points of view and characters, and I was here for every single one of them. What a ride! Also, I love the kind of intensity that something like a low-talent tennis tournament can bring about, that’s all I’m saying.

The Identicals. I recently started listening to Elin Hildebrand’s podcast Books, Beach, and Beyond, in which she – given her own star power – interviews absolute literary stars and talks to them about their writing process. Recently she mentioned that her books follow a formula and she does not deviate from this formula, and I have to say, when you’re right, you’re right. There is something SO lovely about reading a book which you KNOW will end happily, and as you read it, you can see those happy things taking shape. This is a book about estranged identical twins living on Nantucket and Martha’s Vineyard, and they basically trade places for the summer. Capers ensue, everything turns out perfectly, I loved it, the end. A perfectly lovely beach read that I read with the actual beach in view.
Today is the first day of fall! It’s fall, fuckfaces! And so it is the start of Decorative Gourd Season, Motherfuckers, and also – in Canada only! – Decorative Gord Season.

I mean, that will never get old. You’re either ready to reap this freaky-assed harvest or you’re not. Let’s go! xo

Love this idea of reframing just about everything as self-care. I do think perspective makes such a difference. Feeding ourselves can be a chore…or a form of self-care and gentleness and love for ourselves. Too often it feels like a chore to me, and I think it would be helpful for me to cast it in a different light.
In terms of filling the days, I remember my mom telling people she felt busier after she retired than before!
My dad is in a constant battle with squirrels. The red squirrels get under their house and chew on wires and now they’re having issues with grey squirrels. These days he live traps them and then takes them across the lake to drop them off.
Ooooh! The gourds! And the Gords! I love both! I love the idea that everything we do can be an act of self-care, and I am also going to adopt that attitude! The identicals sounds really good to me. I love a book where I can be certain everything will end happily. Those darn squirrels! How dare they mess with your peppers!
I can totally see how someone could get wrapped up in a “relationship” with ChatGPT.
A few weeks ago, I tried using it to practise French – and, of course, I made her (my ChatGPT is definitely a woman) my conversation buddy. She asked me what I wanted to talk about, so we ended up chatting about a race I had later that day.
She was so encouraging, asked all the right questions… I got home and actually felt the urge to report back to her about how it went!!
Absolutely insane.
Since then, I haven’t gone back. It’s just… weirdly intimate for something that isn’t even real.
That’s a good way to frame your daily routine, as self care.
I just put I Who Have Never Known Men on my to-read list because dystopian fiction is a form of self care for me. No, really. I especially like the ones that focus on rebuilding from the rubble; there’s a hopefulness in that.
Beautiful photo of your harvest.
Safe travels!
I am here for your anti squirrel rantings, Nicole! Here, it is the chipmunks I drspise for the same reason.
By the way, my zucchini plant is finally getting going! I have harvested three zucchini so far and there are two more nearly ready to pick and two little ones that I hope will grow into eating size! I guess they like our current hot-as-balls-during-the-day, cold-and-fallish-at-night weather. My cucumbers hate it though. And my tomatoes are taking FOREVER to turn red.
So glad you enjoyed the dystopian book! I loved it so much!
Ooh, that book is one of the ones we’re voting on for Engie’s upcoming book club! I haven’t read it, and I might not pick it up unless it’s the book club pick- in which case I’ll definitely read it. I don’t usually like dystopian, character-driven novels, but this one does sound interesting.
I guess gardening is a lot of trial and error. When we had a garden (so not fun, in Florida) we could grow cherry tomatoes just fine, but when we tried to grow bigger tomatoes, SOMETHING came along and took a bite out of every one of them before we could pick them. I’m a little sad that you’re talking about shutting down your garden, but you know I’m here for ALL the fall vibes!!!
I absolutely cackled at Decorative Gord Season—thank you for the much-needed laugh on a Monday morning!
As for the self-care framing, I often think of something I saw on social media, about treating myself like a toddler: I don’t want to let myself get too hot, too cold, too tired, too hungry or thirsty, or have to go to the bathroom too much. They’re just such obvious triggers to a bad mood. Watching out for these things is my self-care.
I, of course, adore decorative gourd season. Best article ever. Never gets old.
As for self-care… for me it is doing less but doing what I do with intention. That way I know why I’m doing things and avoid being overwhelmed— which for a highly sensitive person like me is the opposite of self-care.
I have yet to use ChatGPT or any other AI platforms. I just got access to an AI platform at work and have yet to do a single thing with it. I can’t think of much of anything that I do for my job that can be done/assisted by AI. They start by giving it to people managers but really, it should go to the most junior people first as they are the ones doing grunt work that could be assisted by AI. I can’t like sub AI in for a client call or travel. I’m very negative about the whole thing but in general, I’m slow to adapt to new technology.
OMG, squirrels. They are the WORST. My parents came to visit once in the winter and put a bag cooler with beer/wine out on the deck. The bag cooler had a zipper enclosure. My mom and I were chatting away and Phil interrupts us to say – um, there is a squirrel in the cooler bag. The little f*cker had chewed through the zipper and hopped into the bag. But there wasn’t even anything of interest to a squirrel, unless he’s into a Kim Crawford Sav Blanc or some IPAs? Another time my parents sent the boys a care package and the squirrels ate through the box between the time it was delivered (mid-day) and when we got home at 5. Luckily they didn’t figure out that there were peanut butter cups inside. They just made a mess of things and then didn’t even get to the treats.
You are really living your best life right now with all of the self care! I look forward to joining you in about 8 years! I will have no problem filling my time.
I am with you about squirrels – such a challenge!
I think being retired allows me to decide what I want to do rather than have to do, so I too feel this time of my life is much more self-care centered.
Loved the McSweeney article! Nothing like a good laugh to start off the day 🙂
LOL your hate for squirrels– love it. Last year, one ate a string of twinkle lights on our fence– yikes!!
The thing that I am least worried about right now is finding ways to fill my time when I stop working. I keep thinking how nice it’s going to be to work out for as long as I want without cutting it short to get ready in time for work, and how if I get tired in the afternoon I can just take a nap. I don’t think you understand how ready I am (current exit date: end of October).
I hope that I Who Have Never Known Men is the CBBC pick so that we can dish about it. But even if it’s not, I will be reading it. I’m picturing something in the vein of Handmaid’s Tale.
I don’t love it when people ask questions like, “So what do you do all day?” I dunno — breathe, feed myself, go to the bathroom… I also love Anne Lamott, and I feel like basing our lives on self-care should be the goal. I’m working toward that — getting there slowly. But you’re spot on about our lives feeling like one long self-care project heading toward the grave. A lot of people live like they’re getting out of here alive, and it shows. 🤣
I’m the opposite, and I love the squirrels in my yard. NOW — if I were growing food in my yard and they started messing with it, I’d probably feel differently. So I totally get your thinking.
I’m with you when it comes to AI and ChatGPT. I keep telling people who use it for minor stuff like planning meals and trips, do you know how much energy it uses when a google search would work just as well? Preach, Nicole! And I love the concept about self-care. It’s coming up to a year soon since I retired and I have absolutely no problems filling my days!
One of my coworker/friends went to Gordlandia in Ithaca, NY. https://www.gourdlandia.com/about
We also love gourds. 🙂
My husband uses chat sometimes to smooth out wording for press releases at work, and now an organization I volunteer for is using it to create content for their blog. Both of these are valid uses, but the energy consumption that it requires stresses me out.
I loved ‘I Who Have Never Known Men’ so much. I listened to it via my library app, but then had to go buy a physical copy.
Those damn squirrels. They do so much damage here. Presently they are killing two beautiful Japanese Maples in my neighbors’ yards. 🙁
You know, when I retired, people kept asking me What I Would Do Next. Um–what? Maybe you did not hear me, I wanted to say. I AM RETIRED. I proceeded to do Whatever The Hell I Wanted, and have kept on doing that quite busily lo! these last 13 years. What is with some people that they don’t understand the concept?
I read a chilling article about a teen whose relationship with an AI chatbot led to his suicide. It’s here: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/family-teenager-died-suicide-alleges-openais-chatgpt-blame-rcna226147 and it’s downright scary. Excerpts from the chats are included, and it’s very disturbing. I’m not a fan at all of AI’s tentacles reaching so insidiously into every facet of life.
Thanks to MF’ing squirrels, I have ZERO butternut squash this year. They ate all of them in the infant stage. Even through chicken wire. And bunnies laughed at my fake bobbleheaded owl and ate all my dill seedlings TWICE. Thank goodness all the rest of my (herb) garden and volunteer tomato plant thrived, or I’d feel like a failure.
Thank you for the segment on Self Care. I have a dear friend who practices what she calls Radical Self Care. She is my hero.
some deep thoughts and hot topics. I wonder the same of what I would do when I don’t have to work anymore, 20 years from now. will I get bored? I think the part that I’ll miss is daily human interaction with others people, the possibility of working on a new idea with others, get inspired by others, and feeling adult?! Yet, a lot of things I won’t miss, like this morning I had cramps and energy by the basement and really didn’t want to go to work but had to. unproductive meetings and annoying people. I’m sure I’ll fill it up just as you do and find other exciting projects.
AI… I have mixed feelings and concerns especially for my kids that are 20 years away form job market. other than time, I can see its convenience. But loving relationship with a robot?! I am not there yet. hehe..
So I just blogged about robots, but in a much less mature way. And okay, you could have a Chat GPT FRIEND to watch eclipses (eclipsi?) with, but if it’s a girlfriend then we have some things to talk about, assuming this is my husband.
We watched a squirrel stuff a whole plum in its mouth from my parents’ tree and take off with it and honestly, respect, but yeah, they are garden-destroying little motherfuckers.
I assume self-care includes social action, since trying to care for the world/planet is also a less direct form of self-care. But yes. I don’t work very much right now, and I don’t have any trouble filling my time.
Okay, it’s kind of monstrous that you read ONE dystopic novel and like it and it’s the one I couldn’t get into at all. Hmph, guess I’ll try again.
I must know where you heard the Anne Lamott interview and what was the AI podcast?
Anne Lamott has so many gems, and her take on self care is perfect. In fact, this post has so many gems, love it!
I am pretty negative about ChatGPT, but I have used it to debug SQL programming and work out Excel formulas. G has just sent me an invite to the work one because he wants me to use it for writing reports( not written, data reports), but I haven’t opened it yet. I keep reminding everyone in my family that Chat GPT is an it (not a he, she or they) and that it can’t think.
The last two years I’ve had terrible trouble with something eating my tomatoes whenever they come close to ripening. I don’t think it is possums because they would break down the plants so it must be rats. I managed to net the plants in 2024 but this year I couldn’t get them netted properly to keep whatever it was out. I’m getting a square raised bed delivered that I’m going to grow tomatoes in this summer, and it has a fully enclosed net I can put on it, so hopefully I’ll get tomatoes this year. I think the possums are running along the top of our fence, though, and eating the new leaves off the citrus trees. It is all very annoying.
Happy Gourd Season!!
I’m not a fan of the AI and ChatGPT. I mean, it’s scary how this stuff can integrate and at one point, I just know it’s gonna take over because humans are getting stupider….it’s only a matter of time!
Girl, all three of your books look great to me–thanks for sharing!
Squirrels. I know they’re a PITA, but they’re cute. And smart. And Cute! ☺️
Is that Willie Nelson? I totally relate to your squirrel capers. I had an animal, one with two teeth (a rat? a possum?) eating just the ends of each of my zucchini one year. Of course I was not going to eat something that a rat or a squirrel had gnawed on, but the worst part is that they never ate the entire thing! Haven’t their mothers taught them to eat everything on their plate instead of slightly dipping into 20 different things! Grrrr. I never did figure it out. I also had some sort of slimy animal (slug? snail?) that was leaving trails on my squash leaves (yuck!) but luckily with some slug bait, that was taken care of. It is a fight against nature, the garden! It can be very rewarding, but very frustrating!
Love all your Canadian Gord’s! I have just added Hildebrand’s podcast to my podcast library. I do enjoy all of her books – never heavy but rather a good relaxing read that always turns out well. I’m just waiting for book 3 of the “paradise” trilogy. I know it’s going to have a happy ending!
ChatGPT and AI in general is such a tough subject for me because I work in digital marketing and if you’re not getting to know how to use these AI platforms, you’re falling behind. Even Google is starting to recognize that AI content is valuable and it’s becoming more and more useful for SEO to have AI-generated content. Isn’t that terrible news?! We allow our writers to use it, but we don’t require it. Most of them use it, though, and it can definitely be helpful when you have to write 10 pages on the same subject. But everything these days is about producing at higher and higher levels since AI can help speed up processes. It’s disheartening, but I have to learn how to use it and incorporate it into what I’m doing. I just try my best to keep it work-related and not use it for personal use. Although I’ll admit I do use it personally from time to time, so I’m not perfect.
I love your comments on self care! I am fairly young (57) and unfortunately on disability because of a slew of orthopedic issues. Many people ask me what I do all day. I feel like I am always busy doing something! Plus, I really think our country is hung up on the word “busy”. I mean, it’s ok to enjoy life! I always enjoyed going to Europe to see how people there are never in a hurry and seem to enjoy just living! Not working doesn’t equal lazy. Wow! What a great garden haul you have! Enjoy!
Ursula Le Guin has a book of essays called “No Time To Spare” and in it she writes about how she is very confused when people ask her what she does with her spare time. And she bristles at the thought that she might have spare time because – and I’m paraphrasing badly – all her time is used up by living life. I think about that a lot.
Hooray for decorative Gord season! Finally met ALL 4 Barenaked Ladies this summer, and seperately took my daughter to her second BNL concert where we were able to upgrade our tickets and ended up IN THE FIRST ROW where they all saw and acknowledged her and Kev gave her a guitar pick. And lo, my 26th BNL concert became my favorite of all time.
Have you heard their song Canada Dry? Gord Downie gets a mention.
Those gourds at the end are beautiful. My house is full of apples right now from apple picking, so I’m leaving the gourd shopping for next month.